» Articles » PMID: 19962227

Additional Analysis of the Secondary End Point of Biochemical Recurrence Rate in a Phase 3 Trial (CS21) Comparing Degarelix 80 Mg Versus Leuprolide in Prostate Cancer Patients Segmented by Baseline Characteristics

Overview
Journal Eur Urol
Specialty Urology
Date 2009 Dec 8
PMID 19962227
Citations 46
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Recent data suggest prostate-specific antigen (PSA) progression may predict overall survival in prostate cancer patients.

Objective: To compare the activity of degarelix and leuprolide regarding PSA recurrence-free survival.

Design, Setting, And Participants: Phase 3, 1-yr, multicentre, randomised, open-label trial comparing the efficacy and safety of degarelix at 240 mg for 1 mo, and then 80 mg monthly (240/80 mg); degarelix at 240 mg for 1 mo, and then 160 mg monthly; and leuprolide at 7.5 mg/mo. Overall, 610 patients with histologically confirmed prostate cancer (all stages), for whom androgen deprivation therapy was indicated, were included. The primary end point of this trial has been reported previously; the protocolled and exploratory subgroup analyses reported in this paper focus on degarelix at 240/80 mg (dose approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicine Evaluation Association for the treatment of patients with hormone-naive advanced prostate cancer).

Measurements: PSA progression-free survival (two consecutive increases in PSA of 50% compared with nadir and ≥ 5 ng/ml on two consecutive measurements at least 2 wk apart or death) and change in PSA were reviewed. Effects of baseline disease stage (localised, locally advanced, and metastatic) and PSA level (<10, 10-20, >20-50, and >50 ng/ml) were analysed.

Results And Limitations: Patients receiving degarelix showed a significantly lower risk of PSA progression or death compared with leuprolide (p=0.05). PSA recurrences occurred mainly in patients with advanced disease and exclusively in those with baseline PSA >20 ng/ml. Patients with PSA >20 ng/ml had a significantly longer time to PSA recurrence with degarelix (p=0.04). The relatively low number of patients in each subgroup is a limitation of this study.

Conclusions: These results generate the hypothesis that degarelix at 240/80 mg offers improved PSA control compared with leuprolide. PSA recurrences occurred almost exclusively in patients with metastatic prostate cancer or high baseline PSA during this 1-yr study. Further studies are warranted to confirm these findings.

Citing Articles

Profile of Relugolix in the Management of Advanced Hormone-Sensitive Prostate Cancer: Design, Development, and Place in Therapy.

Tatenuma T, Miyamoto H Drug Des Devel Ther. 2023; 17:2325-2333.

PMID: 37559910 PMC: 10408655. DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S373546.


A Practical Guide to Relugolix: Early Experience With Oral Androgen Deprivation Therapy.

Kasparian S, Wei O, Tsai N, Palmer J, Pal S, Lyou Y Oncologist. 2023; 28(8):699-705.

PMID: 36888587 PMC: 10400130. DOI: 10.1093/oncolo/oyad036.


Targeting signaling pathways in prostate cancer: mechanisms and clinical trials.

He Y, Xu W, Xiao Y, Huang H, Gu D, Ren S Signal Transduct Target Ther. 2022; 7(1):198.

PMID: 35750683 PMC: 9232569. DOI: 10.1038/s41392-022-01042-7.


Switching Patients With Prostate Cancer from GnRH Antagonist to Long-acting LHRH Agonist for Androgen Deprivation: Reducing Hospital Visits During the Coronavirus Pandemic.

Fujiwara M, Yuasa T, Komai Y, Fujiwara R, Oguchi T, Numao N Cancer Diagn Progn. 2022; 1(1):1-5.

PMID: 35399697 PMC: 8962774. DOI: 10.21873/cdp.10000.


Patients and physician satisfaction of Degarelix in androgen deprivation therapy for advanced hormone-dependent prostate cancer in the Netherlands.

Roshani H, Roos E, Elzevier H, van de Beek C, van Winkel P, Pelger R Curr Urol. 2022; 15(4):204-208.

PMID: 35069083 PMC: 8772641. DOI: 10.1097/CU9.0000000000000029.